Skip to main content

Breadcrumb

Griffon

Challenge
str
18
dex
14
con
18
int
2
wis
16
cha
8

AC 12

HP 57 (6d10 + 24; bloodied 28)

Speed 30 ft., fly 80 ft.


Proficiency +2; Maneuver DC 14

Skills Perception +5

Senses passive Perception 15

Languages


Keen Sight. The griffon has advantage on Perception checks that rely on sight.


ACTIONS

Multiattack. The griffon attacks once with its beak and once with its talons.

Beak. Melee Weapon Attack: +6 to hit, reach 5 ft., one target. Hit: 9 (2d4 + 4) piercing damage.

Talons. Melee Weapon Attack: +6 to hit, reach 5 ft., one target. Hit: 7 (1d6 + 4) slashing damage, or 11 (2d6 + 4) slashing damage if the griffon started its turn at least 20 feet above the target, and the target is grappled (escape DC 14). Until this grapple ends, the griffon can’t attack a different target with its talons.

Combat

Griffons dive on their prey from above. If horses are present, they target them first. If a griffon catches a Large or smaller creature in its talons, it flies at least 30 feet in the air and drops it, or it brings the victim back to its lair. If reduced to 15 hit points or fewer and not in the presence of horses, it retreats.


Legends and Lore

With a History or Nature check, characters can learn the following:

DC 10 A fearsome mix of eagle and lion, griffons are some of the most formidable predators in the sky.

DC 15 A griffon’s favorite meal is horseflesh; untrained griffons will attack horses in preference of all other targets.

DC 20 Unhatched griffon eggs are priceless to anyone looking to raise a griffon as a mount.

Description

A griffon is an aerial predator with the head, talons, and wings of an eagle and the hindquarters of a lion. It roosts in high places, scanning the landscape for prey to eat and trespassers to slaughter. 

Deadly Predators. Griffons are especially fond of the flesh of horses and hippogriffs and will attack even well-armed groups mounted on their favorite prey. They also hunt small humanoids. A griffon will sometimes carry a halfling or gnome alive to its nest to be devoured at its leisure. Griffon aeries often contain treasure these unwilling visitors leave behind.

Coveted Mounts. Adventurers and airborne cavalries alike will pay a high price for griffon eggs. Young griffons can be raised to serve as loyal, if somewhat unruly, mounts. Even the best-trained griffon is never more than one missed meal away from devouring a stray horse or halfling.

Behavior

1 Cruising high overhead; will only attack groups with horses, screeching to attract more griffons

2 Chasing a hippogriff through the air

3 Watching from a rocky cliff top aerie; will only venture out to attack horses

4 Hungry; will attack on sight

5 Sleeping off a recent meal

6 Looking for a meal to bring to its young

Signs

1 Loud eagle cry

2 DC 12 Perception check: giant feather on the ground or atop a crag

3 A dead, half-eaten horse

4 An enormous nest

Encounters

While griffons can be found in any wild environment, they are most commonly seen flying over mountains and hills.

CR 3–4 griffon , flying lion , or thunderbird

CR 5–10 2 or 3 griffons , flying lions , or thunderbirds ; griffon and 1d4 young (statistics of giant eagles

Treasure gold bracelet set with chrysoberyl (750 gp), messenger satchel containing a state secret

Monster Type Description

Monstrosities are magical beings usually native to the Material Plane. Some monstrosities combine the features of beasts and humanoids, like centaurs . Others have bizarre or unnatural appearances, like many-tentacled ropers . Monstrosities could only arise in a world suffused with magic.